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RESEARCH PRODUCT
The influence of smoking status on exhaled breath profiles in asthma and COPD patients
Peter J. SterkCristina LongoJob J.m.h. Van BragtAnke H. Maitland-van Der ZeeScichilone NicolaRianne De VriesSusanne J. H. VijverbergPrincipe StefaniaStefania Principesubject
MaleCopd patientsPharmaceutical ScienceeNoseAnalytical ChemistryPulmonary Disease Chronic Obstructive0302 clinical medicineDrug DiscoveryElectronic Nose0303 health sciencesCOPDConfoundingfood and beveragesMiddle AgedBreath Testsexhaled breathChemistry (miscellaneous)ExhalationMolecular MedicineSmoking statusFemaleAdultmedicine.medical_specialtySmoking habitPulmonary diseaseSettore MED/10 - Malattie Dell'Apparato RespiratorioArticlesmokinglcsh:QD241-44103 medical and health scienceslcsh:Organic chemistryInternal medicinemedicineHumansCOPDPhysical and Theoretical Chemistry030304 developmental biologyAsthmaVolatile Organic Compoundsbusiness.industryfungiOrganic Chemistryasthmamedicine.diseaserespiratory tract diseasesCross-Sectional Studies030228 respiratory systemBreath gas analysisROC CurveAsthma COPD eNose Exhaled breath SmokingCase-Control Studiesbusinessdescription
Breath analysis using eNose technology can be used to discriminate between asthma and COPD patients, but it remains unclear whether results are influenced by smoking status. We aim to study whether eNose can discriminate between ever- vs. never-smokers and smoking <
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2021-03-04 |